Estimation of the walking speed of individuals with transfemoral amputation from a single prosthetic shank-mounted IMU
Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
Date
2019Journal
Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part H: Journal of Engineering in MedicineRésumé
Microprocessor prosthetic knees, able to restore the gait of people with transfemoral amputation, are now often equipped with sensors embedded in the prosthetic shank, which could be used to assess some gait characteristics during real-life activities. In particular, an estimation of the walking speed during the locomotion of those subjects would be a relevant indicator of the performance. However, if methods have already been proposed in the literature to compute this walking speed, none are directly usable in this context and with this population. For these reasons, the current study proposed to estimate the instantaneous walking speed with a shank-embedded Inertial Measurement Units based on a biomechanical model of the prosthetic lower limb. Averaged walking speed estimation has been quantified for nine individuals with transfemoral amputation walking on a treadmill at different speeds and slopes when wearing an instrumented knee ankle prosthesis. Experimental results demonstrated the ability of the model to estimate the walking speed with an accuracy of 9% (normalized root mean squared errors over all the patients), which is consistent with previous reported walking speed estimation errors. In addition, as the walking speed estimation is instantaneous, the proposed method can provide the estimation by the end of the stance phase, which is an originality compared to other methods based on step length estimation. The present method is relevant for the estimation of walking speed during real-life activities of above-knee amputees opening the way to direct activity monitoring from the prosthesis.
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Article dans une revue avec comité de lectureDAURIAC, Boris; BONNET, Xavier; VILLA, Coralie; LAVASTE, François; PILLET, Helene (Taylor & Francis, 2015)Walking in various situations is a challenging task for people with a lower limb amputation. Walking upslope and downslope requires a larger ankle range of motion than waking on a level ground. Most of prosthetic feet ...
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Article dans une revue avec comité de lectureLOIRET, Isabelle; VILLA, Coralie; DAURIAC, Boris; BONNET, Xavier; LAVASTE, François; MARTINET, Noël; PAYSANT, Jean; PILLET, Helene (Elsevier, 2016)Introduction Amputee people have gait defaults, as for example loading asymmetry, which increase with daily living situations. Replication of realistic daily living environment in a motion analysis laboratory (MAL) is ...
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Article dans une revue avec comité de lectureLOIRET, Isabelle; VILLA, Coralie; DAURIAC, Boris; BONNET, Xavier; MARTINET, Noël; PAYSANT, Jean; PILLET, Helene (SAGE Publications, 2019)Background: Amputee gait is known to be asymmetrical, especially during loading of the lower limb. Monitoring asymmetry could be useful in quantifying patient performance during rehabilitation. Wearable insoles can provide ...
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Article dans une revue avec comité de lectureLOIRET, Isabelle; VILLA, Coralie; DAURIAC, Boris; BONNET, Xavier; MARTINET, Noël; PAYSANT, Jean; PILLET, Helene (SAGE Publications, 2019)Background: Amputee gait is known to be asymmetrical, especially during loading of the lower limb. Monitoring asymmetry could be useful in quantifying patient performance during rehabilitation. Wearable insoles can provide ...
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Article dans une revue avec comité de lectureThe command of a microprocessor-controlled lower limb prosthesis classically relies on the gait mode recognition. Real time computation of the pose of the prosthesis (i.e., attitude and trajectory) is useful for the correct ...